potentially dangerous environment variables all together. It should be
noted that the run-time linker will not honnor these environment variables
if the process is tainted currently. However, once a child of the tainted
process calls setuid(2), it's status as being tainted (as defined by
issetugid(2)) will be removed. This could be problematic because
subsequent activations of the run-time linker could honnor these
dangerous variables.
This is more of an anti foot-shot mechanism, there is nothing I am
aware of in base that does this, however there may be third party
utilities which do, and there is no real negative impact of clearing
these environment variables.
Discussed on: secteam
Reviewed by: cperciva
PR: kern/109836
MFC after: 2 weeks
symbol lookup failures that later result in null-pointer
dereferences. This needs looking into, but since we're
close to release it's possible that it's not resolved before
that time.
Warning, after symbol versioning is enabled, going back is not easy
(use WITHOUT_SYMVER at your own risk).
Change the default thread library to libthr.
There most likely still needs to be a version bump for at least the
thread libraries. If necessary, this will happen later.
Not because I admit they are technically wrong and not because of bug
reports (I receive nothing). But because I surprisingly meets so
strong opposition and resistance so lost any desire to continue that.
Anyone who interested in POSIX can dig out what changes and how
through cvs diffs.
to override weak symbols exported by libc, so by definition these two
are using the same symbol version names.
Reflect the reality by referring to libc's Versions.def directly.
The support for RFC 2640 (UTF8) is optional and rudimentary.
The server just advertises its capability to handle UTF-8 file
names and relies on its own 8-bit cleanness, as well as on
the backward compatibility of UTF-8 with ASCII. So uploaded
files will have UTF-8 names, but the initial server contents
should be prepared in UTF-8 by hand, no on-the-fly conversion
of file names will be done.
PR: bin/111714
Submitted by: Zhang Weiwu <see email in the PR>
MFC after: 1 week
main object list, its versioning information needs to be examined
separately.
This hopefully fixes problems that people running with SYMVER_ENABLED
are experiencing.
activate the traces, set the LD_UTRACE (or LD_32_UTRACE) environment
variable. This also includes code in kdump(8) to parse the traces.
Reviewed by: kan, jdp
MFC after: 2 weeks
dso that are actually loading. If dso a.so depends on b.so, then dlsym
with handle from dlopen("b.so") will fail unconditionally.
Correct implementation shall use the Obj_Entry.needed list to walk
dependencies DAG.
Test provided by: jkim
Tested (prev. version) by: jkim, Nicolas Blais <nb_root at videotron ca>, h.blanke at chello nl
Pointy hat to: kib
Approved by: kan (mentor)
given as dso handle, but also in the implicit dependencies of that dso.
Also, const-ify the read-only parameter objlist of symlook_list.
Reported by: "Simon 'corecode' Schubert" <corecode at fs ei tum de>
Approved by: kan (mentor)
X-MFC-After: 6.2
ignoring errors when sourcing rc.conf* files. The most common error
occurs when users put a command of some sort into those files.
(ifconfig is a popular choice)
2. Make the file rotation logic simpler by starting one down from
the "top" of the list, rather than at the top.
3. Try to make file rotation more secure by calling unlink(1) on all
new file names before rotating an old file to the new name, rather than
merely calling 'rm -f' on any files that exceed the number of files
to save.
- Don't use full path in .Nm (we just don't do that).
- Correct some frivolous and poorly rendering language,
such as using possessive case for .Nm or .Fl .
- Use the same capitalization for "user ID" as in setuid(2) and getuid(2).
- Bring SEE ALSO in accord with the text.
MFC after: 5 days
crunched floppies, but they can be included as options in
src/release/picobsd (omitted by default though.) Therefore
preserve the RELEASE_CRUNCH knob in their Makefiles, but
tell its real purpose in a comment.